C. R. Fedrick, Inc. v. Sterling-Salem Corporation

507 F.2d 319
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 1974
Docket72-3118
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 507 F.2d 319 (C. R. Fedrick, Inc. v. Sterling-Salem Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. R. Fedrick, Inc. v. Sterling-Salem Corporation, 507 F.2d 319 (9th Cir. 1974).

Opinions

REAL, District Judge.

This appeal brings before this Court what is, perhaps, a classic example of the various inadequacies of a Federal Court’s diversity of citizenship jurisdiction.

Defendant-appellant, Sterling-Salem Corporation (hereafter Sterling) appeals from a judgment rendered by the District Court on behalf of plaintiff-respondent C. R. Fedrick, Inc. (hereafter Fedrick) on a claim arising out of a purported breach of contract in which Sterling was to supply certain equipment for a construction job at Incline Village, Nevada.

Fedrick’s trial theory and the basis upon which the trial court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment against Sterling in the sum of $56,882.95 is grounded in promissory estoppel (Restatement of the Law of Contracts, Section 90).

Sterling, an Ohio corporation, duly authorized to conduct business in California, is engaged — through its division Topeo — in the manufacture and sale of sewage pumping equipment, including [320]*320prefabricated sewage stations. In mid-1969, Topeo orally authorized one Marvin Derfler (hereafter Derfler) to act as its independent commission agent in the California area; and Derfler was so employed in the Fall of 1969 when the events now in controversy arose.

Fedrick is a licensed contractor in the State of California. In August, 1969, when the Incline Village General Improvements District (hereafter District) invited bids for the construction of certain sewage pump stations at Incline Village, Nevada, Fedrick — in response to said invitation and in order to meet the scheduled bid opening on September 4, 1969 — solicited price quotations on the equipment necessary for the construction of these sewage pumping stations.

Chas. Lowe Company (hereafter Lowe), a supplier of pumps and other construction equipment, contacted Fed-rick for the purpose of quoting prices on the equipment for what was then known as Sewage Pumping Stations Nos. 7, 8 and 9 of the District’s planned Incline Village project.

Sharing office space with Lowe, but having no other connection with it,1 Derfler, together with Jay Gwinn, a Lowe employee, obtained price quotations from Topeo on the equipment needed for Pumping Stations 7 and 9. Der-fler having informed Topeo that its customer in this instance was Lowe, Topeo, in the absence of Derfler, responded with price quotations to Lowe on Pumping Stations 7 and 9, at bids of $11,329.-00 and $6,115.00 respectively, for a total of $17,444.00.

Upon reviewing this quotation, Lowe, through its employee, Herb Roedel, then submitted a quotation to Fedrick for $45,900.00 — $21,700.00 for Station 7, $16,200.00 for Station 8, and $8,000.00' for Station 9. The variances are not totally accounted for in the evidence before the trial court. However, the difference in the Topco’s quotations for Stations 7 and 9 and Lowe’s quotation to Fedrick for Stations 7 and 9 is at least partially accounted for by Topco’s arrangement with Derfler by which the would customarily add an amount to Topco’s bid to represent his commission compensation when he in turn quoted his own bid.

An additional portion of the difference between the oral quotation to Top-co’s customer and its subsequent written breakdown may be attributed to Topco’s correction of its obvious failure to include in its quotation to Derfler and Lowe a rotor necessary for one of the pumping stations. Derfler, however, had previously noticed the error and corrected it before submission of the bid by Lowe to Fedrick. The quotation by Topeo to Derfler was then adjusted to reflect this correction, thereby changing the price of the two stations to $21,944.-00 in lieu of the original $17,444.00 bid.2

Fedrick, utilizing the quotation received from Lowe, submitted its bid to the District, with all the foregoing occurring on September 4, 1969. As required by the District’s bidding procedures, the bid stated that Lowe was the supplier and Topeo3 the manufacturer of the equipment to be used on Stations 7 and 9. Equipment for Pump Station 8 was listed as supplied by Coast Pump Company and manufactured by Allis Chal-mers.

On September 16, 1969, Fedrick executed a prime contract with the District for construction of the project, while October 29, 1969, found Fedrick directing its printed form of Purchase Order Agreement to “Topeo in care of Lowe.” [321]*321This mailing was done in apparent compliance with Fedrick’s common practice of addressing its purchase orders to the manufacturer of the equipment and not to the supplier. Although the evidence is far from clear, the trial court found that this purchase order eventually was mailed to Lowe’s San Pedro office from its Emeryville office but never forwarded to Topeo in Ohio. Topco’s Ohio office was never advised of the receipt of the purchase order in San Pedro, and the purchase order was never signed or otherwise accepted by an employee of Topeo. In addition, Lowe had never advised Topeo that it had in any way accepted Topco’s price quotation for Stations 7 and 9.4

Two or three weeks after the bid date Derfler and Roedel, Lowe’s employee, met with a representative of Fedrick to deliver a Topeo Pumping Station Catalogue. Thereafter, as is customary, Topeo, through Derfler, made submittals5 to Fedrick and the District upon the equipment which it had quoted to Lowe. During the period for which these submittals were under consideration by the District, Topeo and Fedrick came to an impasse as to ability of the equipment which Topeo has offered to meet the requirements of the District. The disputes were never resolved; and on March 11, 1970, Topeo, by letter, in effect withdrew itself from consideration regarding its providing of Stations 7 and 9.

Fedrick then obtained Stations 7 and 9 elsewhere at a higher cost than that quoted by Topeo on September 4, 1969. This suit solely against Sterling followed, and damages were founded on the delay in and additional cost of the completion of the District project by Fed-rick.

As to Sterling’s liability,6 the District Court’s judgment on behalf of Fedrick can withstand this appeal if (a) the trial court’s findings concerning agency relationship between Topeo and Lowe are not clearly erroneous, i. e., are adequately supported by the record, or (b) Topeo is estopped by force of the Restatement of Contracts, Section 90 (Revised) from denying a contractual relationship between Topeo and Fedrick.

The record does not seem to support the trial court’s finding of an agency relationship between Topeo and Lowe.7 The evidence, it appears, fis to the contrary since both Derfler and Lowe disclaimed any agency relationship. There is no evidence to the effect that Fedrick ever believed that it was dealing directly with Topeo by means of any agency with Lowe. For all that Fedrick knew, Lowe could have previously purchased the equipment from Topeo and then had it in stock for its own account. The judgment of the District [322]*322Court, therefore, cannot stand on this theory of the case.

As an alternative, Fedrick asks this court to affirm on the Restatement of Contracts Section 90 (Revised) which provides:

“A promise which the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or forebearance on the part of the promisee or a third person

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Related

Kearney Commercial Bank v. Popejoy
119 S.W.3d 143 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2003)
C. R. Fedrick, Inc. v. Sterling-Salem Corporation
507 F.2d 319 (Ninth Circuit, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
507 F.2d 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-r-fedrick-inc-v-sterling-salem-corporation-ca9-1974.